Upcoming
Events

Our vibrant programming is the gateway through which members gain empowering information, share experiences, and develop a deep sense of belonging to the community. At a time when older adults may find their social networks shrinking, San Francisco Village programs offer opportunities to expand. Programs are continually evolving, reflecting the interests and requests of our dynamic membership, and generally fall into one of six categories: Healthy Aging, Express Yourself, Member-Led, Connections Across Generations, Navigating Today’s World, and Exploring San Francisco.

On average, San Francisco Village hosts 30 program events per month. Take a look at our calendar and get involved!

94131 Circle

Oct 13, 2017

10/13/2017 from 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM PST

The 94131 Circle will meet on Friday, October 13 at 7:00 PM at the Presidio Club for the Delphi Piano Trio - a house concert, experience jazz, contemporary, and classical music. This event is free. Interested members should contact Jennifer Kaufmann

Thank you for your interest in San Francisco Village! In order to proceed, you will need to create a user account. By signing up for a user account, you will be able to manage your contact information and review any transaction history.

Thank you for your interest in San Francisco Village! In order to proceed, you will need to create a user account. By signing up for a user account, you will be able to manage your contact information and review any transaction history.

“It’s about staying engaged both in the home and out of the home … It’s about familiarity with others at a time in life that is rich and full of surprises, and it’s about having fun with other city-dwellers who value a common lifestyle.”

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Wanda Borges, PhD, RN, ANP-BC is the Associate Dean of Graduate Programs and Community Partnership at University of San Francisco. She has worked as a nurse for more than 20 years in a wide variety of settings. She has specific training as an Adult Nurse Practitioner and obtained her PhD from University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston in 2004 with her dissertation research on an intervention to improve self-care behaviors in patients with diabetes who were being seen in the emergency department for non-urgent care. Since graduation she has continued to build her research trajectory has focused her research efforts in Community Based Participatory Research. In her current role she works to establish intentional Academic Practice Partnerships with health care agencies that have a shared mission and values with USF and provide students the opportunity to learn to solve real world problems. Partnering with community based health centers to improve health care outcomes, she has provided external evaluation and continues her work in evaluation of health care interventions.

Gary Campanella

Chief Financial Officer, On Lok, Inc.

Gary Campanella is responsible for the financial management of On Lok and its subsidiaries. He began his work with On Lok as interim CFO in January 2016 and became On Lok’s permanent CFO in May 2016. As CFO, Gary provides both tactical and strategic oversight in the areas of: accounting and reporting (internally, Board of Directors, and government agencies); financial planning and analysis; business intelligence; cash management and investments; financial systems; and finance organizational development.

Gary has held senior finance roles in healthcare since 2004 in small to mid-sized, private, for-profit entities – a national behavioral health provider involved in substance abuse treatment; a physician-based pain management company; a regional behavioral health provider focused on serious mental illness; and a national developer and operator of urgent care clinics. Prior to healthcare, he worked in high technology companies in Silicon Valley.

Gary holds a master’s degree in business administration from the Fuqua School of Business at Duke University and a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Duke University.

Barbara Kivowitz

Health Care Strategy & Innovation Consultant and Author

Barbara Kivowitz, MSW, is a consultant and author specializing in health care innovation. She works with health care systems nationally to help them shift to more relationship-based models of care. She is the author of Love in the Time of Chronic Illness: How to Fight the Sickness, Not Each Other – a guide for patient-caregiver partners and for the clinicians who help them. She has delivered programs based on her book to clinicians at Stanford Health Care, UCSF, Massachusetts General Hospital, Dana Farber Cancer Center; and she is a frequent speaker at conferences for patient-caregiver groups. She was on the Board of Directors of Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates. She is on the Patient and Family Advisory Councils of Stanford Health Care and Sutter Health. Previously, Barbara led the innovation and the collaboration practices at Lotus Institute at Lotus/IBM and designed processes and tools for building community and sharing knowledge. Barbara’s background is in the fields of organizational development and psychology. She holds graduate degrees from Harvard University and Simmons College. She speaks Spanish and Portuguese fluently, and French badly.

Jill Waller

Marketing Specialist, Community Volunteer

Jill has been engaging consumers of all ages with her messaging, programs and product expertise for more than 20 years, largely in the toy and game industry. She has worked on marketing and product for Pokemon, Cranium, Trivial Pursuit, LeapFrog and many other iconic brands—and always enjoys problem solving to provide innovative products, services and communication to inspire human potential. Jill is passionate about supporting human purpose and fulfillment at all ages, and has served as a volunteer for San Francisco Village since 2017.

Mary Moore Gaines

Emeritus
Rector Emeritus – St. James Church

Mary Moore Gaines is the Rector Emeritus of St. James Church. She served on the Boards of the Community Learning Center and the St. James Preschool. She has been a visionary leader of San Francisco Village from the beginning. Throughout her long ministry, Mary Moore has championed older adults who want to stay in their homes as they age. She has expanded her vision beyond the church to serve older adults and their families in all of San Francisco.

Anne Hinton

Aging and Adult Services

Anne Hinton is the former Executive Director of the San Francisco Department of Aging and Adult Service (DAAS), a position she held for 10 years. Over the course of her 30+ year career, Anne held various other positions, including the Director of Home Care, Care Management and Fiduciary Services Department for the Institute on Aging; the Director of Aging Services for San Francisco Catholic Charities; and the Director of South San Francisco Senior Services. She has served on the board of directors for the National Association of Area Agencies and the California Association of Area Agencies on Aging. In 2015, Anne was invited to attend the White House Conference on Aging. She is the recipient of the Justice in Aging Award, 2016 Paul Nathanson Distinguished Advocate Award and the Community Living Campaign 2015 Norma Satten Community Service Innovation Award.

Steven Hieger

Vice President, Information Technology

Steve has spent his career involved in the various aspects of technology. He has worked in manufacturing, financial services and long-term care. He is currently the Vice President of Information Technology for Northern California Presbyterian Homes & Services (NCPHS) which provides housing and services to seniors throughout the Bay Area. Steve is responsible for all things IT at NCPHS including providing strategic direction, budgeting, enterprise applications and day to day operations. Originally from Indiana, Steve has lived in San Francisco for over two decades and truly loves the city he now calls home.

Steve Hayashi

Retired Engineer

Steve worked as a Development Engineer, Engineering Manager and Program Manager for 40 years for Tandem Computers and Cisco Systems. He has been responsible for creating, staffing, managing, and budgeting engineering design groups in a high-tech startup environment. Currently, Steve is a committee member for his college fraternity charged with raising $1.5 million to bring the hundred-year-old fraternity house up to modern safety and living standards. An active San Francisco Village member, Steve enjoys participating in the monthly mentoring exchange with students from City Arts & Technology High School.

Patrick began his career in the field of aging in 1973. He is the Founder and Director of the Center for Elderly Suicide Prevention and Grief Related Services (CESP), a program of Institute on Aging in San Francisco. Patrick conducts workshops and presents lectures locally and nationally on aging related subjects and he is the author of numerous articles and book chapters on a variety of aging related topics. He is a Senior Lecturer at Notre Dame de Namur University in Belmont, CA.; an occasional Lecturer in the School of Social Welfare at the University of California, Berkeley; and an Adjunct Faculty member at The Wright Institute. Patrick is the recipient of several awards including the 2013 Mental Health and Aging Award presented by the American Society on Aging, a Silver Medalist for Public Service sponsored by the Jefferson Award Regional Committee and the 2016 Norma Satten Community Service Innovation Award for his commitment to human rights and community living.

Gretchen Addi

Design Consultant

Gretchen is currently a consultant and designer-in-residence at Aging2.0. She was previously an Associate Partner and business lead for IDEO in the Bay Area for 17 years. She led IDEO’s efforts to build a domain of work in the Aging space as well as providing mentorship and guidance to the Design Research discipline. She is passionate about the power of empathy and design, and the people who make it happen as well as speaking and writing on the needs of the aging population. She brings a strong strategic point of view to all of her work, both from a brand and service perspective. Gretchen is also a board member for At Home With Growing Older.

Joanne Low

Community Volunteer

Joanne is a San Francisco native with over 40 years of experience in the field of adult education. She has worked for non-profits and City College of San Francisco in various teaching and administrative positions. While at City College, she served as the Dean and then as the Associate Vice Chancellor for the Chinatown/North Beach Campus and the School of ESL and International Education and eventually retired as the Interim Vice Chancellor of Academic Affairs. One of her major accomplishments was the development, design, and construction of 183,000+ square foot campus in Chinatown. Joanne also served 23 years in different capacities on the Board of the Richmond District Neighborhood Center, a non-profit with programs for youth, adults, and families.

Lauren Chaitkin

Finance / Accounting

Lauren brings 40 years’ experience in finance and accounting, serving in various capacities including private industry, public accounting, non-profit organizations and private foundations. Prior to retirement, she served as the Finance Director for the Zellerbach Family Foundation and since retiring, she continues to consult for the San Francisco Chronicle Season of Sharing Fund. Lauren is a competitive Masters swimmer and a member of San Francisco Village.

Bill Haskell

Long Term Care Strategist

Bill has worked for 14 years as a long term care strategist for San Francisco’s Department of Aging and Adult Services, developing numerous strategic initiatives benefitting older adults and adults with disabilities. At the request of the SCAN Foundation, following the development of San Francisco’s plan for long term care integration (LTCI) for older adults eligible for both Medicare and Medi-Cal, he mentored three other California counties in developing LTCI plans. For 10 years, Bill was the facilitator of the Mayor’s Long Term Care Coordinating Council. Prior to his work in long term care, Bill was Assistant Chief of Health Services for the AIDS Office of San Francisco’s Department of Public Health, where he administered contracted home and community-based HIV/AIDS services as well as HIV/AIDS housing resources.

Claudia Lewis, JD

Attorney / Community Organizer

Claudia practiced litigation for over 15 years as a partner at Farella Braun & Martel LLP, specializing in securities litigation and white collar criminal defense. She is a Founder of San Francisco Village. She previously served as the President of the San Francisco Women Lawyers Alliance and the Community Learning Center at St. James. She founded and led Richmond Presidio Neighbors, which successfully resolved a dispute over the redevelopment of the Public Health Services Hospital in the Presidio. She has been very involved in addressing quality of life issues for Richmond District residents, particularly its children and older adults. She also has been a passionate fundraiser for two independent schools and Yale Law School.

Maya Kamath

Communications and Fund Development Coordinator

Maya is a public relations and communications professional with more than a decade of experience; her expertise includes consumer products and technology PR, as well as event management and content development. She has been a pro-bono consultant with the Taproot Foundation since 2012, and has participated in three service grants to date. Maya attended the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) and graduated with a BA in mass communications and a minor in political science.

Contact Maya via email: maya@sfvillage.org

Sarah Brigid Newsham Kent

Program Coordinator

Sarah has spent the past decade working in creative and non-profit settings in Chicago, Baltimore, Juneau, and San Francisco. She is passionate about community building, art making, accessibility, and social justice. Sarah studied social work, art, and psychology at Loyola University Chicago and spent two years post- graduation volunteering with the Jesuit Volunteer Corps. She enjoys exploring and adventuring in San Francisco on foot and bike, making feasts from farmer’s market finds and scheming her next creative project.

Contact Sarah via email: sarah@sfvillage.org

Yousra Sebiaa

Administrative Assistant

Yousra was born and has lived in the Bay Area her whole life. She began working at San Francisco Village during her sophomore year of high school and she is now a student at San Francisco State University, where she is majoring in Social Work with a minor in Counseling and Health Education.

Contact Yousra via email: yousra@sfvillage.org

Jill Ellefsen

Member and Volunteer Coordinator

Jill has been working in the field of aging for 15 years, starting as an in-home care provider until going back to school to earn her Masters of Gerontology from San Francisco State in 2013. She has experience as an Activities Coordinator at an assisted living facility, a Resident Services Coordinator at a low income senior housing complex and has also been a hospice volunteer. While she joined the staff in 2018, Jill has been part of the San Francisco Village community since 2014, when she began as a volunteer. In her free time she loves spending time at the beach, cycling, hiking and knitting.

Contact Jill via email: jill@sfvillage.org

Kate Hoepke

Executive Director

Kate Hoepke, Executive Director, has been a community-builder for 30 years, in the field of aging since 2001 and with San Francisco Village (SFV) since 2012. Under her leadership, SFV has grown exponentially: membership has tripled, volunteers have quintupled, the budget has doubled and so has the staff. In addition to her role at SFV, she chairs the leadership team of Village Movement California, advancing the Village Movement statewide. Kate has a BA in sociology and an MBA from San Francisco State University.